Boss Kelly House and Row (Baltimore, Maryland)
USA /
Maryland /
Mount Vernon /
Baltimore, Maryland /
West Saratoga Street, 1102-1120
World
/ USA
/ Maryland
/ Mount Vernon
World / United States / Virginia
place with historical importance, interesting place
On the Baltimore Heritage Preservation Watch List
www.baltimoreheritage.org/Current.html
1106 West Saratoga Street is part of a row of houses that were built between 1830 and 1845. The building takes its name after “Boss” John S. (Frank) Kelly, the leader of the West Baltimore Democratic Club who controlled all things political in West Baltimore in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. John Kelly moved into the house in the 1860s and lived here for the rest of his life. Kelly ran the political machine of West Baltimore that elected several mayors, senators, judges, and state representatives. He was also the inspiration of Dashiell Hammett’s character Shad O’Rory in the novel (and later movie) The Glass Key. Architecturally, the building is a prime example of the cumulative development of row house design in Baltimore, and is featured in the 1981 book, Those Old Placid Rows, by Natalie Shivers. The house and the others in the row are unusual, possibly unique in Baltimore, for their single second-story tripartite windows and gabled roofs. This row has been attributed to the work of architect Robert Cary Long, Jr., whose father designed a similar row in the unit block of Mulberry Street in Mt. Vernon. The Baltimore Department of Housing is in the process of acquiring 1106, as well as the rest of the row and hundreds of other properties in the Poppleton neighborhood, to turn over to the private development firm of La Cite. La Cite’s current plans are to retain the Boss Kelly House and demolish all the other buildings in the row to build new housing.
As of 2011, the buildings are starting to fall apart.
www.baltimoreheritage.org/Current.html
1106 West Saratoga Street is part of a row of houses that were built between 1830 and 1845. The building takes its name after “Boss” John S. (Frank) Kelly, the leader of the West Baltimore Democratic Club who controlled all things political in West Baltimore in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. John Kelly moved into the house in the 1860s and lived here for the rest of his life. Kelly ran the political machine of West Baltimore that elected several mayors, senators, judges, and state representatives. He was also the inspiration of Dashiell Hammett’s character Shad O’Rory in the novel (and later movie) The Glass Key. Architecturally, the building is a prime example of the cumulative development of row house design in Baltimore, and is featured in the 1981 book, Those Old Placid Rows, by Natalie Shivers. The house and the others in the row are unusual, possibly unique in Baltimore, for their single second-story tripartite windows and gabled roofs. This row has been attributed to the work of architect Robert Cary Long, Jr., whose father designed a similar row in the unit block of Mulberry Street in Mt. Vernon. The Baltimore Department of Housing is in the process of acquiring 1106, as well as the rest of the row and hundreds of other properties in the Poppleton neighborhood, to turn over to the private development firm of La Cite. La Cite’s current plans are to retain the Boss Kelly House and demolish all the other buildings in the row to build new housing.
As of 2011, the buildings are starting to fall apart.
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 39°17'33"N 76°38'9"W
- Inner Harbor 2.2 km
- Old Town Mall 2.7 km
- Baltimore Streetcar Museum 3 km
- Clover Hill 4.8 km
- St. Mary's Seminary & University and Ecumenical Institute of Theology 7.8 km
- North Point Plaza 12 km
- Diamond Point Plaza 12 km
- Glenn L. Martin Company - Middle River Plant No. 2 (1941- .. ) 20 km
- USNA Cemetery and Columbarium 36 km
- West River Yacht Harbor 51 km
- Harlem Park 0.5 km
- Upton 1.1 km
- Baltimore Bromo Arts Ward 1.1 km
- Washington Village / Pigtown 1.3 km
- Sandtown-Winchester 1.4 km
- Baltimore Stadium Area Ward 1.7 km
- Downtown Baltimore 1.9 km
- Baltimore City Center 2.1 km
- Mid-Town Belvedere 2.2 km
- Baltimore County, Maryland 17 km